About 1382 results for "mitchell johnson"

Australian pace spearhead Mitchell Johnson has claimed that their batting order got a little bit nervous through the middle period in their dramatic World Cup loss to New Zealand on Saturday at Eden Park.Zee News, 3 hours ago

Comment · print · T T T+· T- Photo: AFP Australia's Mitchell Johnson and Steve Smith have some fun on the eve of the match against Afghanistan. TOPICS Steve Smith is expected to be all right despite suffering a blow to the hand in ...

Fast bowler Mitchell Starc might have proven himself as the World Cup's most crucial bowler, but he doesn't believe that he is Australia's pace 'spearhead' yet and insists that Mitch Johnson is definitely the leader. The left-arm paceman has ...

Brendon McCullum after being hit by a Mitchell Johnson delivery at Eden Park, on Saturday Wellington: Captain Brendon McCullum is expected to be fit for New Zealand's World Cup clash against Afghanistan next Sunday despite being hit on the arm ...

McCullum was hit by Australia fast bowler Mitchell Johnson high on his left forearm and received treatment on the area, which immediately swelled up. He slipped on a protective arm guard and continued batting, eventually being dismissed for 50 in New ...

It all started out with a headbutt. March 3, 2010 was the night Mitchell Johnson decided the best way to get into Scott Styris's head was to ram his own head into it - sending trans-Tasman relations on a controversial crash course that ends so ...

Shane Watson and Mitchell Johnson share a laugh during an Australian training session. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images A hostile crowd buoyed by New Zealand's perfect start to the World Cup is set to turn Eden Park into a bear pit for visiting Australia on Saturday, but all-rounder Shane Watson is "excited" by the prospect of a rancorous reception. Both countries' fans have eagerly awaited the fixture, the first between the trans-Tasman Sea rivals in nearly two years and one likely to ...

As the hosts enjoyed the second of two days off in the surrounds of their Brisbane hotel on Tuesday, Mitchell Johnson borrowed from the rhetoric common around Australian teams during the incomparable era of 1995 to 2008, when winning bred confidence and more ...